Constructing
controllable liquid patterns with high resolution
and accuracy is of great importance in droplet depositions for a range
of applications. Simple surface chemical micropatterns have been popularly
used to regulate the shape of liquid droplets and the final structure
of deposited materials. In this work, we study the morphological evolution
of a dissolving femtoliter droplet pinned on multiple microdomains.
On the basis of minimization of interfacial energy, the numerical
simulations predict various symmetric droplet profiles in equilibrium
at different liquid volumes. However, our experimental results show
both symmetric and asymmetric shapes of droplets due to contact line
pinning and symmetry breaking during droplet dissolution. Upon slow
volume reduction, the deposited microdroplet arrays on one single
type of simple surface prepatterns spontaneously morphed into a series
of complex regular 3D shapes. The findings in this work offer insights
into design and prepararion of the rich and complex morphology of
liquid patterns via simple surface premicropatterns.